Guest Joey Clift (The Nerdist) joins host Geoffrey Golden for a soapy episode of Two Packs, the trading card comedy show! This week, they open packs of ABC drama cards – All My Children (1991) and Lost (2006) trading cards. While opening the packs, they discuss helicopter prison breaks, the paperwork involved in selling a child, and Geoffrey tries to remember anything about Lost. All on this episode of Two Packs presented by Meltdown Comics (and the Dharma Initiative)!

Alexi Wasser has been telling it like it is online for years via her IMBOYCRAZY Blog, ALEXI IN BED YouTube show, and now with the LOVE ALEXI Podcast on Nerdist. Matt & Alexi discuss relationships, uncomfortable auditions, and Alexi’s romantic future on this not-safe-for-work episode of Pod Sequentialism with Matt Kennedy presented by Meltdown Comics!

Saturday, June 28th, 2014 starting at 2pm, come join Neal for a spectacular showing of what his studio does in New York as well as hearing great stories of Comics History told to you by the legendary man himself Neal Adams!

Heath Corson from Nerdist Writer’s Panel: Comic Edition will host a talk with Mr. Adams. Neal will present “Blood” the Motion Comic in it’s early stages for the graphic novel “Dark Horse Presents” “Blood” due February 2015 as book one of the graphic novel. Directed by Neal and animated by his Production Studio who worked on the “Astonishing Xmen Motion Comic for Marvel. Neal will be doing “Blood” as a Motion Comic and then as a fully animated movie. He’ll also discuss “How Comics Happened and the Dirty Silver age” and then Q&A as well.

Heath Corson is a proud co-host of the Nerdist Writer’s Panel: Comics Edition as well as an award-winning writer. He wrote the animated DCU movies JUSTICE LEAGUE: WAR and the upcoming BATMAN: ASSAULT ON ARKHAM, due out this summer. After adapting Jill Thompson’s SCARY GODMOTHER comic to the stage, he was approached to write the adaptation for television. Then he moved here from Chicago where the movers stole all of his stuff. It’s a good story. Ask him to tell you it. He has since bought new stuff.

Nerdist Writer’s Panel: Comic Edition this podcast stumbled out of the radioactive sludge of the Nerdist Writer’s Panel and grew into a powerful four-headed beast. Mightily co-hosted by Ben Blacker (Thrilling Adventure Hour), Heath Corson (Batman: Assault on Arkham), Adam Beechen (Batman Beyond) and the ever lovin’ comics legend Len Wein (Wolverine, Swamp Thing, etc) this fantastic four probe the secret inner thoughts, techniques and processes of the some of the most creative minds in comic books.

Meet Comics Legend Neal Adams Saturday June 28th. First autograph is FREE! (Additional autographs are $10 each) Portfolios, Art Prints, Books and Sketches will be available for purchase! We are also taking on commissions so now is the time to get a piece of art drawn up by Neal Adams. Email Jason at adams@nealadams.com And Jason will work out characters and prices with you. Maybe get a Batman Black & White Variant blank with a Batman head sketch drawn on it. You can also call Jason at 212-869-4170 or email adams@nealadams.com

Celebrating its 20th anniversary, the Los Angeles Film Festival returns June 11–19 to L.A. LIVE. Don’t miss out on red carpet premieres, conversations, live music, free outdoor screenings and films from around the world. Meltdown Comics is proud to host the screenings of Jossy’s and Harmontown. In Jossy’s, five young women reluctantly agree to join a secret team of super heroes and battle intergalactic evils in the broad parody of Japanese sentai shows like Kamen Rider and the Power Rangers. Harmontown follows NBC’s Community writer/producer Dan Harmon as he hits the road with his popular podcast, accompanied by his co-hosts, his girlfriend and a whole lot of baggage. For more info and tickets visit lafilmfest.com

Five reluctant young women are recruited to become Earth’s last line of defense in this broad parody of Japanese Super Sentai shows like Kamen Rider and the countless iterations of the Power Rangers. Wearing the prerequisite color-coded uniforms, the team must fight off intergalactic villains like StinkBug and Mutant Mucus despite an utter lack of training. Even more problematic, however, is discovering that alien invasions are terribly inconvenient when they arise during a first date or trip to the salon, forcing our heroes to choose between their personal lives and saving the planet. (Spoiler: The planet doesn’t always win.)

On the surface, Harmontown is a road movie about the boozy live shows of the popular podcast of the same name. Capturing backstage shenanigans and philosophical musings along the way, the film follows a band of misfits that include TV writer/producer Dan Harmon, actor/comic Jeff B. Davis, Dungeon Master Spencer Crittenden and Harmon’s girlfriend, writer/comic Erin McGathy, as they tour the country.

Ultimately, however, it’s a portrait of the talented Harmon–a riveting blend of righteous arrogance and destructive self-loathing–whose seemingly flippant disregard for the TV industry is matched only by his desire to be deified within it. Director Neil Berkeley is as unrelenting as Harmon is willing to pursue candor at all costs as he battles with demons and deadlines. The resulting fireworks make it easy to understand the passionate and heartfelt following Harmon has amassed.